Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 August 1945 — Page 12

'S LABOR _ TROUBLES REMAIN

7 : Despite Attlee’. Victory, Unions Still Wrangle Over Wages, Hours and Paid Vacations; Soldiers’ ‘Replace Striking Dockmen. By WILLIAM H. STONEMAN

Times Foreign Correspondent LONDON, Aug. 3.—Labor’s victory in the general elections has had no visible effect on Britain's current labor troubles. The representatives of the country’ s great rail- : way companies and three railway unions today renewed * efforts to break the deadlock arising from the employees’ * demand for increased wages, a 44-hour week and an annual

TT paoDnSES NEW FARM SYSTEM

2 ni WHILE THE DISPUTE is, theo-

retically, due to pass through fur‘ther agencies of mediation before an officlal strike is possible, the

Another “secret weapon” the projectile pictured here.

many surrendered,

Devised by Professor Wag ner, projectile, called the “Schmettering,” miles an hour with a ceiling of 50,000 feet.

. THE INDIANAPOLIS 1 TIMES _ Germany Had This. Up Her Sleeve, Too °

Nazis had “in the works”

former chief Junkers aircraft designer, is a radio-controlled bomb believed capable of speeds up to 600 It was intended for use against allied planes. This one was built of parts found in a factory at Nordhausen where mass production was about to start when Ger-

before the war's®end is the odd-looking

the

involved. authorities clearly are afraid that Editor's Organization Would

breakdown may result in an un-| cifial sire, aitecing the whoe| BE Compulsory. country. | N ( ) ~~ Overworked railway men in the! WASHINGTON Age. v. P)—| Liverpool area have already staged . ’ : & series of unofficial Sunday strikes | and threaten to cease work next Monday, Britain's August bank hol‘day, when hundreds of thousands of persons expect to have :a holiday. Railway workers, in general, have been badly overworked and poorly paid, according to American stand- | ards. The minimum wage they demand is the equivalent of $18 a week.

today had submitted to the agriculture department's reorganization committee a “self-financing” peacetime farm program which he be-

$25,000,000,000 to the nation’s annual income, His plan calls for an acreage al-| lotment program, conservation prac- | tice payments, government commod- | (ity loans at full parity and a two< ww {price system for farm products go-

ACCORDING TO the agreement NE into foreign trade. reached in 1935, if the present di-| ABY sound farm program must rect negotiations fail, the matter assure the farmers a fair return must be referred to a joint council, jon his agricultural business, Ronald consisting of an equal number of {S2d. representatives of workers and em- | Sets Up Association ployers. If they, in turn, fail t0| Under Ronald's plan, the agricul- | reach an agreement, it must be tyral adjustment agency would be referred. to a three-man national replaced by a national conservation tribunal, and a strike cannot be|association, farmer - administered

|

|

WASHINGTON, Aug: 3 (U.

U.S. Budget Estimates Less Income and Costs Next Year

P.) —Both ~government income and

Il spending will.be lower during the current fiscal, yqar than last—revenue by $7,500,000,000 and spending by about $15,000,000,000—the budget Cattle and d Calf R

bureau forecast today in issuing revised budget estimates for 1946. Budget Director Harold D. Smith said spending during fiscal 1946 |

Mitchell (S. D.) Daily Republican, 'was now expected to be $84,900,000,000.

his original January estimate of | $83,100,000,000, but far under the 1945 figure of $100,000,000,000. The revised budget placed

lieves would add $15,000,000000 t0/era] income for the current year |

at $30.000.000,000. That compares with a $41.200,000,000 estimate in January | $46,500,000,000 {last year. Based on War

in actual

The budget was based on the as-|

{sumption that the Japanese war

would continue at

{June 30, 1946, the end of the cur-|

rent fiscal vear. Smith declined to say whether another budget had {been prepared for use in event the war ends “suddenly. The expected revenue decrease {will not result from lower tax rates. Instead, it reflects new busi- |

and an all-time high of! receipts |

least through |

“* ANNOUNCE CANNED VEGETABLE SUBSIDY

The agriculture department the office of price administration announced jointly yesterday the

pay processors for sweet corn, tomatoes and tomato juice under the 1945 subsidy program. i The subsidy payments will be | made on sales to civilians of canned | goods made by processors between | ‘May 1, 1945, and June 30, 1946. The subsidy is designed to prevent a| (rise in the consumer cost of living | and to compensate canners for in-

called until the tribunal's decision and paying all its own SAMmInISTra- yess: aid tax legislation, lower than|creased costs.

is given. According to the war-|tjve costs through member assess-| time agreement, no transport strike ments: can be called in any circumstances. ciation would be compulsory after Atfother - dispute, which remains’ its establishment had been approved | to be settled, is the “go slow” move- ny 70 or 80 per cent of the farmers. ment on the London docks. This iS| The association would set up a| due to a cancellation of the agree- standard rating for good conservament, reached before D-Day, giving tion practices. Compliance would | longshoremen a bonus for heavy pe implemented by a tax every, work, The dockers now unoffi- farmer would pay on the sale of his| cially demand that they be given al farm products. The tax would minimum daily wage equivalent 10 pe returned to the farmer accord$5 instead of the current $3.20. The ing to his compliange with the conemployers are willing to negotiate, | servation practices. If a rating but only after the dockers stop their of more than 100 per cent were atobstructionist tactics. Pending a tained he would get back the full settlement, soldiers are doing the tax plus a bonus, work of about 1000 regular dockers.| wMaximum acreages for each crop , 8 =n ‘would be announced yearly by the ACCORDING TO the latest issue secretary of agriculture “to proof the Ministry of Labor Gazette,|vide an abundance of foodstuffs of | there were 205 stoppages of Work'all kinds.” “This acreage would be in June, affecting $57,000 workers allocated by the farmers themand costing 200,000 working days. selves through the association. About 1,000,000 working days were lost during the first six months of this year, 420,000 of them in coal! The acreage allotment would be mines. fixed to provide an “ever-normal” It will be interesting to see how granary—“if anything more abun- | the labor government operates in dantly than ever, because it is : curtailing further disputes. Nobody the farmers’ interest to carry over

Provide Granary

expects it to eliminate them en- ample reserves against. crop ~ tirely. ures.’ . tc tae eee | Commodity loans at full parity] : would be madé available through WARD DEMANDS U S private banks and guaranteed by y 1 VI the government He proposed that farmers get. a; ORDER BE REPEALED “blended price” on exportable commodities. Each farmer would buy CHICAGO, Aug. 3 (U.P.) —Mont- “export debentures” on the pergomery Ward & Co. today de- centage of the crop normally exmanded withdrawal of an order by ported and pay for them the difwhich it charged government-con-!ference between the domestic and trolled Ward properties must refuse world price. The debentures would | to fill orders from Wards’ unseized pe reissued to the exporters and stores unless the mail order firm would enable them to just meet the paid to the army money received world price but not undersell it from the sale of such goods. “and so would not be dumping,” In a letter to Secretary of War ronald sald. Henry L. Stimson, Sewell L. Avery, . board chairman, accused the army Open Employment of demanding a share of the! If farmers can show by producing profits earned by branches of the Prescribed cost record that parity company still operated by Wards. Prices do not provide a net: return “You have seized and retain more then the government loan should than $35,000,000 of Wards’ merchan- | be pegged at the next return figure, | _dise and other property, for which he said. you paid Wards nothing,” Avery lieved, should be above depieciawrote Stimson. “You refuse to fill tion, a fair wage to the individual

expected sales of surplus property

taxes. This latter is the result of unemployment brought on by war production cutbacks. More for Peace

Smith estimated that. the war spending alone during fiscal 1946 {would be $70,000,000,000—the same! as his January estimate, but $20,000,000,000 less than last year, In the field of non-war governmental spending, the new estimate is for $14,900,000,000, or -$1,800,000,000 higher than the early forecast. This was due to recent commitments to support the international monetary fund and the interna-|

tional bank for reconstruction and| development.

Another factor was congressional approval of a plan to]

{expand the capitalization of the |

Export-Import bank.

G6. E. REFRIGERATORS , ARE ROLLING AGAIN

ERIE, Pa, { eral Electric Co. today resumed com-

plete assemhly-line production of] household electrical . refrigerators for the first time since April 30, 1042, First refrigerators, of a total of 95,000 to be made by the company in 1945, rolling off the production line immediately were shipped to warehouses from which they wil be distributed to army, navy and] government claimant agencies. H. L. Andrews, vice-president in| charge of the company’s

and merchandise department,

pointed out that the general public probably before new ones

must continue to wait, until next year, re available.

PURDUE EXPANDS

FORESTRY COURSE

LAFAYETTE, Ind. Aug. 3.—Ex- P.).—The dismissal of H. K. Rogers | This net return, he be- pansion of the forestry curriculum |

Aug. 3 (U. P.).—Gen- |

1m

appliance

As previously announced, the

Membership inthe -8ss0-!gng 4 drop-in individual -income|rate .on number. .two..size..canned

| tomatoes will be 18 cents a dozen or six cents higher than last year. The subsidy for the other three commodities will be unchanged | | from last year, as follows: Peas, | {20 cents per dozen cans; sweet corn, {eight cents, and tomato juice, six| | cents. Subsidy tomato products such as tomato] soup covered by the program will {be determined in the same manner as last year. The rate will amount to the difference between this year’s growers’ support price for the raw {product and the 1943 re-sale price of the commodity credit corp.

Blame Weather If Meat Is Short

OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., Aug. (U. P.).—Secretary of AgriculEa Clinton P. Anderson said today that if there is a shortage of meat next winter the people can blame the weather—not the OPA or congress. | Anderson, in Oklahoma City

|

|

| for a conference’ with. Oklahoma livestock raisers and” farm offi- | cials, said the nation's meat prospects depend largely on the corn rop. I “And the weather.” he said, “is | solely responsible for the short | corn crop predicted for 1945. “If the crop in Iowa and other | states is short, then it is not wise | to ask farmers to start feeding | | cattle and hogs and to increase | their poultry stocks. Until we | know how much the corn crop will be, we will not have a clear picture of the meat situation.”

ROGERS DISMISSAL

|

FROM WLB SOUGHT

1

EVANSVILLE, Ind, Aug. 3 (U.|

from a sixth district war labor

at Purdue university will make it |P03rd panel was sought today by

possible for candidates’ for

the |

the United Electrical, Radio, and!

orders for Wards’ customers out of farmer himself for reasonable work- bachelor of science degree in for-| Machine Workers Local 805 (C. I.

Wards’ merchandise unless Wards ing hours. and enough income to

pays a second time for this mer- employ help to operate at top effi- duction of wood technology and!

ciency. ts i Ronald pointed out that with this INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE kind of an income to farmers Clearin, rah Aen ah $ 6,920,000 . y n-| Poasing teri 18.955 000 What is probably ihe largest un- | LEGAL used pool of employment” would be LEGALS i . —a opened up. Farmers would add to ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS 4 7 BY v The Board bo! Trustees of Purdue Uni. the national prosperity by providing! versity will receive sealed bids for the more jobs as well as by having a construction of a Naval Science Building | i located on the Campus of Purdue Univer- arger purchasing power sity until 10:15 a. nC. W. T.) on the 21st day of August, 1845, at the office of - the Controller, in the Executive Building P:-Anderson-this week invited Ron

of Purdue University, West Lafayette, In- ald to join the committee as a con-

chandise.”

The sand farm

sand farm in Gibson county [for melon and sweet potato growers

‘SET DAY FOR SOIL DEMONSTRATION

Times Special : umen LAFAYETTE, Ind, Aug. to each bidder ip re- | two-day demonstration of modern | n 10 days after ihe obent | soil conservation practices with mechanical equipment will be held on the Evans farm, five miles south

digng;-a4-which-time-and building all bids | gyitant. The group is. composed of | will be publicly opened and read aloud Dra 4 Any aT rceivad after the above desig- well-known agricultural experts, | nated time will be returned unopened headed bv Milton Eisenhower, ! Proposals may be submitted for com- § n : plete gonstruction Jheloding (a) General president of Kansas State college, Construction. (b) umbing. fc) eating oT a . and Ventilating, (d) Electric Wiring and and has been charged with stream Light Fixtures. lining the department's many Proposals shall be ‘properly and com- goencies pletely executed on proposal form 96 with non-collusion afMdavit Tequiteq by 8t att es | of Indiana, and must be accompanied hy Questionnaire ors P8-a State Board of PURDUE SCHEDULES Accounts for all bids of $5,000.00 or more , Each proposal shall be accompanied by | acceptable certified or cashier's check | TWO FIELD DAYS made payable to the Trustees of Purdue | Times Special University, or acceptable bidder s shone. for an amount of not less than 57% fatal bid Bros. work will be pe. AUBUSL field days have been Sched-] quired to furnish acceptable surety bond | |uled by the Purdue university horin amount of 100% of contract sum ticultural department, i rt a er of Mages, The'annual state tbmato day for | as determined p ot The Acts Je Drovisions| canning crop fieldmen and Tfertilof Chapter 319 of the Act oie 0f General As-|izer salesmen will be held at ‘ , may withanaw his bid for a {university Aug. 17. Jerid of (30) days after date set | Inetrac a de Purd s i Ts, plans and spe- | Purdue sidestions are on file at the office of R. HAMILTON, Superintendent of : Physion) Plant, Purdue University. State Board of Accounts,

Shdisnapolis, Indiana, ph, the documemts may be obihe Arch faponiLing « check for $10.00 with tec Ror Bcholer, 1114 State Lalayetia, Indiana, for each. set we cine

of Purdue University re3» reject any o o r all bids

of U. 8. roads 40 and. 43, on Aug.| 130 and 31, Purdue avarsity said

LAFAYETTE, Ind, Aug. 3.-Two |

the |,

field day is set for Aug. 21 on the|%

3—A|

-|of Greencastle at the intersection MN

estry to major in either forest pro-

utilization, the school said today

The change will hecome effiective | at the start of the November term. |

REPORT ON WOOD PULP

WASHINGTON, Aug. 3 (U. P) —The department of commerce re-

ported today that imports of wood | totaled 11,059 Secretary’ of Agriculture CHNton chart tons in the week ended. July

pulp from overseas

27,

INCORPORATIONS

Hedges Pontiac, Inc, ton st Indianapolis Hedges. same address;

agent, John

850 shares Class Yl

10.) of Tell City. Rogers has been serving as in. | Idustrial representative on the WLB panel studying the wage dispute between the General Electric Co.'s! {Kenrad plant and the union. Herman Schauberger, local presi- | (dent, charged that Rogers delayed {the panel hearing a month when | {he purposely, ran out on a meeting scheduled for July 14.

HOOSIER ARMY SHOP

‘HOLDS FIX-IT RECORD

JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind. Aug. 3 3215 E. Washing- (U. P.).—The textiles and general

{ supplies repair shop at the Jeffer- |

and 1150 shares Class B stock of $100 gar | sonville quartermaster depot today

value Havden

John W. Hedges, V. E’ Welo, H. E to deal’ in motor vehicles,

| plies and accessories

Ayers Engineering, Inc, 1256 -W, Indianapolis: agent 320. BE. Maple 1rd,

preferred of

iton 560

Indianapolis shares $50 par L. Hamilton, John Fred "Wellman, J. H. Ayers. Canada Dry Ginger Ale, Inc, | ware corporation; admitted to {to manufacture snd sell beverages, extracts, syrups, | es erages, ete W, Jim Roberts, Inc, amendment changing name to Roberts, Inc Glass Handicrafters, New Albany; agent, 13s E. Oak st., New Albany; $100 par value; Bruce Fox, Turley, James A. Yunker, G. Remy Ine, Decatur! Remy

kB

Indianapolis

|

Bierly. agent, G. Bierly, sam real e and Remy Bierly; Florence C. Blerly, B. Price, Fern E. Bierly, Bierly Jr Frederick E. Blerly, Goines ne Spangler, Joan L. Bierly. od & Co, Inc, New Castle; an ow Jed The Roth-Bryant Realty |N. Harrison st. Shelbyville: |A. Roth, 316 N. Nobie st,

insurance

Co.; Ine. agent, Bhelbyvil

| 300 shares without par value; Louis E

Bryant, Ralph A. Roth, Bthel Roth. Westbrook Corp., Indianapolis; of address of "dines Boch pene oer ’ . O'Brien st, Attias Pe ville; amendment canoe REE stock, AW,

sup- |

value and 2% Shares common stock of $20 Par

Inc., 417 Pearl st | Chester 8. Wentzell | 250 shares Frances

07 8. 2d st, atidress; 3000 shares of $2.50 par value; i agency; G Florence George R. Mary dis-

"02 Ralph

JShang el gs

JGonners.

be

| held the record of restoring to |

service almost $5.000,000 of supplies |

21st|and equipment in less than ei Ross Gear & Tool com. Milton L. Ham- ght

months, From October, 1944, until June | 9 this year, the shop either repaired | and returned to army stocks or

Dela- | Indiana | Manufactured from surplus supplies

carbonated | Of Other agencies some 301,760 tex- | alcoholic | tile and general supply items val- |

ued at $4,807,690.

our | - ee.

GRAPE WINE PRICE CUP.IS SCHEDULED

WASHINGTON, Aug. 3 (U, P.).— The office of price administration announced . today that retail ceilings on American grape wine will be cut 15 to 25 cents per fifth next April 1, : Ceiling prices for processors were reduced dn an average of about 25 per-cent, effective Dec, 31.

That is slightly higher “than | si =] |

| Medi

| 800 108) pounds

HOG MARKET STEADY HERE

Are Meager.

Today saw another “active clear-

ance of the 2675 hogs received at | the Indianapolis stockyards, the U.!

S. department of agriculture reported. Prices held firm at ceiling

levels,

WASHINGTON, Aug. 3 (U. P.).—| A meager showing of 275 cattle and sold at unchanged prices, as did the |275 calves received. Sheep and lambs amounted subsidy rates the government will 300, and the top prices for ewesw canned peas, moved 50 cents higher,

to

GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (2675) 14.004 14.50

120-140 pounds 140- 160 pounds 160 pounds up mum-—-

Me 160- 220 pounds .... ......

Packing { Good te Choice— 270- 400 pounds | Good— 40g. 0 pounds

1250 "550 pounds ......,

Slaughter Pigs

| Medium to Good— 90- 120 pounds

CATTLE

14.50@ 14.30 14.80

. [email protected]

. 12.759 14.00

. 11.25@13. |

1235)

Steers

Choice— 700-900-1100 1100-1300 300-1500 | 1590.18 700- 900 900-1100 1100-1300 3 0. 1500 fedium--Medi 1100 pounds 1100-1300 pounds Common-— 700-1100 pounds

Heifers

Choice— 600- 800 pounds 800-1000 pounds

00d— 600- 800 pounds 800-1000 pounds Medium-— 500- 900 pounds Common-— - 900 pounds

Good Medium

Cutter and’ ‘common ‘iu

Canner Beef—

Cows (all weights) rive . [email protected] woe [email protected]

teres vessess 16. 50@17. if

[email protected] 13.50@ 15.25

[email protected]

. [email protected]

: "Bulls all weights)

Good (all weights) ...

Sausage— Good Medium Cutter and common.

CALVES

Vealers (all weights)

Good and choice

Common and medium ....

Cull

'

(275)

rrireriee 155001125

[email protected] [email protected]

12.50@ 14.75 [email protected]

7.50@ 10.50 6.26@ 7.50

[email protected] 12,[email protected]

[email protected] 8.00@ 10.50

. 15.50@ 16.00

. [email protected]

5.00@ 9.50

Feeder and “Stocker “Cattle and Calves

Choice—

500- 800 pounds ..... ...

800-1050 pounds

a! — 500- 800 pounds 800-1050 pounds um—

Common— 500-1000 pounds .....

. 13.50% 14.75

13.50 15.00 [email protected]

. [email protected]

CALVES (Steers)

| Good and .chojce— a 5% pounds

200" ds down

Good and choice—

| 500 pounds down

Medium-— 500 pounds down

SHEEP

Good and choice

(Heifers)

[email protected] [email protected]

[email protected] «+. [email protected]

[email protected] |

eceipts

~— 00ST OF LIVING

CONTINUES RISE

In Second Quarter.

per cent in the quartér endéd June 15, the«U. 8. labor depdrtment re-

ported today, average rose ‘1.7 per cent, Over-all prices in Indianapolis are up 32.1 per cent since August, 1939, the report said, and are 2.6 per cent higher than last June. Last month's cost of living index for Indianapolis stands at 1205 per cent of the 1935-1939 average, which

-1is the highest level it has reached

since the winter of 1920. City food prices rose 4.0 per cent

{with advances in fresh fruit and | vegetable “prices chiefly responsible | Eggs rose 2.0 per cent during June. Rents Down

Clothing prices edged up 0.1 per cent during the quarter, and fuel, electricity and ice advanced 1.1 per cent. The miscellaneaous goods and ‘services group advanced 0.6 per cent chiefly due to rises in! es hair cuts and in toilet sr

go prices for cook stoves more fo offset increases in sofa beds, (dinnerware and glassware, resulting {in a net decline of 14 per cent in | housefurnishings. Z Rents went down. 0.1 from Dec. 15, 11944, to June 15, 1945, but the hous- | ing SROriage <o continued to be acute,

RAILROADS REPORT INCREASED INCOME

WASHINGTON, Aug. 3 (U. P). —Class 1 railroads in the first six months had net income of $325 000,000 compared with $322,533.400

the Association of American Railroads estimated today.

MORE CHROME DUE” WASHINGTON, Aug. 3 (U. P.).—

romate for the manufacture of chrome pigments have been increased, WPB said today.

City Prices Up 1.6 Per Cent Indianapolis retail costs rose. 1.6

“while the national

in the three months, the report said,

in the corresponding 1944 ‘period. |

August allocations of sodium bich- |

'Tiger' Veterans Form Company

3 LONG BEACH, Cal, Aug. 3 (U, P).—Contract air Cargo service between Long Beach and New York was inaugurated today by the National Skyward Freight Corp, a cpapany formed hy veterans of Maj. Gen. Claire L. Chennault’s Flying. Tigers. The first of a fleet of seven twin-engined Conestoga planes, each capable of carrying 10,000 pounds, was commissioned for service today.

CITY DEPARTMENT STORE SALES RISE

Indianapolis . department store sales for the week ended July 28 showed an increase of 7 per cent over a year ago, the seventh fed{eral reserve district reported today. All stores in the area, which in[Cider Milwaukee, Chicago, Detroit and Indianapolis, showed the usual seasonal decline from the preceding | week, the report saigl. | Indianapolis department store sales for the entire month of July [were up 24 per cent, a greater rise {than any other city in the district.

ARMY ROPE POOL | ENDS FIRST YEAR

Times Special JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind., Aug. 3. | —Enough rope to lasso the moon from the earth—1,500,000,000 feet— has been distributed by the Jeffer{sonville quartermaster depot, the army said today. Established last July, the pool controls supply and distribution of [rope for army services, manufacturling plants producing government | [goods and lend lease arrangements. in the pool's first year of existence, approximately 38,000,000 pounds of (rope, valued at $15,000,000, have been handled.

|

BUILD AT ELKHART ELKHART, Aug. 3 (U. P.).—BExcavation work started today for an

expansion of the American Coating Mills plant. The new building will | cover 190,000 feet of floor space.

FRIDAY, AUG. 3, 1945

HERE IS 6000 NEWS ON BEEF

Anderson Says Steaks Will Be Back This Fall.

WASHINGTON, Aug. 3 (U. P.) =

Secretary of Agriculture Clinton P.

Anderson today offered civilians the cheering news that beef steaks and roasts are “coming back” this fall and winter. Writing in the current issue of

American magazine, Anderson saic there should be “appreciably more’ beef on the market soon. He listed prospects of increased production, cutbacks in military purchases and better distribution as the reasons. “Your butcher should be back at work this fall and winter,” he said. Anderson warned, however, that

the outlook for other foods is not so {

bright. “As things look now,” he said, “We're going to be short of eggs, pork, lard, butter, sugar and even soap, as well as chickehs, until the spring of 1946 at least.” Half in Black Market Anderson disclosed that at the peak of the black market this spring fully one-half of the civilian supply of top-quality beef and almost 75 per cent of the chickens were being sold at illegal prices.

He expressed the belief that rey

cent government steps were slow' choking the black market to deat The nation’s food boss said t fear of being caught with food s pluses on V-J day was the “bs F8 cause” of present shortages.

'LAUNDRIES ON WA’

TO G.I’S IN PACI

SYRACUSE, N. Y.,, Aug. 3 (U —Complete, compactly built laundries, providing within hour service for G. I.'s, now ars ing flown in army cargo plane remote Pacific island outposts. The Prosperity Co., Inc., manuf turers of the unit, announced tI'y

{production of 1000 iaundries is ui

der way at its Syracuse plant.

| | 3

LH: ETE

. [email protected] |

(300) Ewes (Shorn)

Common and medium .

LAMBS (Spring) Good and choice ..... .

Medium and good Common

8.00@ 7.50 4.50@ 6.00 |

. 14.006G15.00!

12.754 13.50

Mea ERR [email protected]

LOCAL ISSUES

STOCKS Agents Fin Corp com Agents Pin Corp pfd L 8 Ayres 412% Ayrshire Col com | Belt R Btk Yds com | Belt R Stk Yds pid | Bobbs-Merrill com

Bobbs-Merrill 4'2% pfd ... 3

Central Soya com Circle Theater com .

td ve

| Comwlth Loan 57% pid %

[ Delta Electric com Electronic Lab com

t Wayne & Jackson RR ptd NY 19

Hook Drug Co com . Home IT Ft Wayne 7 Ind Asso Tel 57% pfd Ind & Mich E 44s ptd Indpls P & L pid Indpls P & L com . indpls Railways com Indpls Water pfd.. Indpls Water Class A Jefl Nat Life com {ingan & Co pid Kingan & Co com Lincoin- Loan Co H'v%

P R Mallory pid |P R Mallory com Mastic Asphalt J N Ind Pub Serv 5%... | Pub Serv Ind 5%

Progress Laundry com

So Ind. G&E 4.87%

%' pid. |

com res

| Pub Serv of Ind com. . :

Stokely-Van Camp pr pf a

{Terre Haute Malleahle |U 8 Machine com United Tel .Co 5% . Union Title com

BONDS

American Loan 4'zs 55 ay Buhner Fertilizer 5s 54....... 0

| American ‘Loan 4'zs 60

Ch of Com Bldg 4'as | Citizens Ind Te), 4%as | Columbia | Consol Fin bs 58 Ind Asso Tel Co 3'as

Indpls P & L 3'4s 70

Indpls Rallways Co bs Indpls Water Co 3'as

N Ind Tel 4's 55 Pulby Berv of Ind Vas Pub Tel 4'3s8 55

*Ex- dividend,

Trac Term Corp 58 67.... H. J. Williamson Inc 5s 55..

61. 61.

Club 1%zs Bs

Bid Asked

20

3 107% 15 5% 98%

pid one | Lincoln Nat Life com .......,. §

10... 1

a 0

Kuhner Packing Co 4s 54..... N Ind Pub Serv 3'as 73......

ay 1

en

E

agents

YOUR

eh

AFFILIATED

LOCAL PRODUCE

od INSURANCE AGENTS

WAGON WHEAT

ju rollsrs, fr:

vators are paying 81.88 per bushel for 1 rd wheat (other new oats, No. 2 white i. No.’ stock | 33 1 better, 80¢; corn, Fy 3 ye $1.10 bushel,

oft crop, 1

Indianapolis flour mills and grain -l No. os An Aheit ‘merits) ;

oie

| No. 2 poultry, 4e ol roosters, & fo.

ge de. Eraoe”

he

A” medium, oe

Jb 80e. tite, 8.

(Prices for plant delivery) All breed hens 3250c. ° yen and roosters unde ’ ., white an garred rocks, 30 3-10c

can solve

Insurance

cooperating in the support of right prin i“ | on pl Pe IL. to sphold fair practices | ;

ROSTER

Indianapolis Insurance Beard

Allison Realty Ceo, Bon O. Aspy Bankers Trust Co.

Wm. A. Barrett Agency Barton, Curle & McLaren W. Garvin Bastian

D. J. Bellinger George A. Bischoff Fred G. Bock, Jr.

Wm. R. Bockstahler

Bowen-Mahaffey Harold W. Brady

Brandon & Jameson

W. A. Brennan Agy.

George E. Brewer Harold O. Burnett City Ins. Agency City Securities Co.

George L. Clark & Ine.

Cooling-Grumme-Mumford

C. Fred Davis Ralph 8. Deckef H. C. Dunmeyer M. L. Fahey

Fidelity Trust Co.

Glenn F. Findley Fletcher Trust Co. Fox and Fox Leo P. Gauss Warren 8. Gibson

LeRoy G. Gordner

A. M. Graybill

Gregory & Appel, Inc.

. w. A. Grimes

Hadley-Mahoney Co.

Martin B. Hall Hall & Hil 0. A. Hanle Myron 8. Harlan Russe. H. Hartman

Charles B. Hauk Ins. Agy.

Adam R. Heck

Hoosier Underwriters,

Jne. Lee Hyman Indiana Trust Co.

Indianapolis Ins. Agy.

Interstate Agency C. Otto Janus

R. F. Kerbox Agy.

P. E. Koplein

C. 7. Kreis John F. Lance Fisk Landers Landers & Landers “OK” Mannan Marsh & McLennan, Ing Maurice W. Mason _Mazxwell Ins. Agency Clarence W. Meyer M. H. Miller, Ine.. Liebert I. Mossler P. J. McGinty McGowan & Brosnan E. Kirk McKinney Carl R. Otte Theodore H. Paine Mark W. Pangbora Norman 8. Peine Pilgrim & Fray Murry K. 498 : Emp Rassman, Ine. welville C. Rentsth Carl R. Rhude Schloss Ins. Agency Schmid & Smith, Ine. H. E. Schmitt Ins. Agy. Security Trust Ce. Service Ins. Agency Chester Smith 0. J. Smith Realty Ceo. The Spann Ce. H. J. Spier Co. State Natl Securities er COP el Theodore Stein. Jr. Sterling Ins. Agency The Stickney Ageney Stone, Stafford & Stone Aubert A. Sutton Ralph F. Thompson Frank A. Throop Earle F. Trimpe | L. H. Trotter wr fi Union Trust Ce. John A. Welch J. R. Welch & Sons

A. J. Wichmann, Ine. John B. Wolf J Herman C. Wolff Ce. H. H. Woodsmall Agy Ine.

Ine.

Corp.

Ce.,

Farrell, Yovag & Davis

Fieber & Reilly Ins. Agy.

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